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    Delhi Assembly polls: 14.75 pc turn out in first three hours

    Poll officials said 14.75 per cent votes were cast in the first three hours of voting, which began at 8 am.

    Delhi Assembly polls: 14.75 pc turn out in first three hours
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    File Photo: PTI

    New Delhi

    Delhi recorded 14.75 per cent voter turnout in the first three hours of polling on Saturday with long queues of voters being seen outside many booths as the day progressed.

    Over 1.47 crore people are eligible to exercise their franchise in the polls that will decide the fate of 672 candidates in 70 assembly constituencies which are seeing a triangular contest among the ruling Aam Aadmi Party (AAP), opposition BJP and the Congress.

    Poll officials said 14.75 per cent votes were cast in the first three hours of voting, which began at 8 am.

    Polling will end at 6 pm, an official said.

    Former vice president Hamid Ansari and BJP national secretary Ram Lal were among those who queued up outside the Nirman Bhavan polling station in the first hour of voting.

    Chief Minister and AAP national convener Arvind Kejriwal, who is eyeing to repeat his party's 2015 assembly performance, voted at the Rajpur Transport Authority polling station in the Civil Lines area.

    Kejriwal, who is contesting the polls from the New Delhi seat, was accompanied by his wife Sunita and son Pulkit. Before leaving for voting, he sought his parents blessings.

    President Ram Nath Kovind, former prime minister Manmohan Singh, Congress President Sonia Gandhi, Rahul Gandhi, Priyanka Gandhi Vadra, West Delhi MP Parvesh Verma and Delhi BJP chief Manoj Tiwari also exercised their right. Union Ministers S Jaishankar, Hardeep Singh Puri were also among those who cast their vote.

    Minutes before polling began, Kejriwal tweeted, "Please go to cast vote. A special appeal to all the women - As your shoulder the responsibility at home, likewise, the responsibility of the country and Delhi is on your shoulders."

    Union Home Minister Amit Shah, who led a very aggressive campaign and covered 60 assembly seats, appealed to voters to "free" the national capital from lies and vote-bank politics.

    "By giving Delhi clean air, clean drinking water and every poor house, only the best capital of the world can make it a government with far-sighted thinking and strong intentions.

    "I appeal to the people of Delhi to vote to free Delhi from lies and vote bank politics," Shah tweeted.

    BJP president JP Nadda also appealed to all the voters to vote in large numbers.

    "Each vote of you is important for the unity and integrity of the country and holistic development of Delhi. Your vote only will be script the golden future of Delhi. 'Pehle Matdan, Phir Jalpan'. Jai Hind," Nadda tweeted.

    The minimum temperature in the city on Saturday settled at 7 degrees Celsius, three notches below the season's normal.

    Shallow fog engulfed some parts of the national capital, leading to 'very poor' air quality, a MeT official said.

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